The long range goal of this project is to understand the process of evolution of new enzymatic activities. The system which will be used to study this process consists of the three enzymes of the 4-chlorobenzoate degrading pathway found in adapted soil bacteria. The proposed work is divided into three parts. These parts and their specific aims are as follows: Part I: Evolution of catalysis in 4-chlorobenzoyl-CoA dehalogenase. 1. Determine the energy profile for catalysis. 2. Measure the contributions of active site residues to the free energy of ground states and transition states in catalysis. 3. Test interchange of dehalogenase, crotonase and delta-3-cis, delta-2-trans enoyl-CoA isomerase activities within the dehalogenase scaffold. 4. Test in vivo evolution of 4-fluorobenzoyl-CoA activity and 2-chlorobenzoyl-CoA activity from the 4-chlorobenzoyl-CoA progenitor and in vitro evolution by random mutagenesis and by rational design. Part II: Mechanism and structure of 4-chlorobenzoate:CoA ligase and 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA thioesterase. 5. Complete the x-ray structural determination of the crystalline thioesterase. 6. Measure the time course for a single turnover on the thioesterase and test for the formation of a covalent enzyme intermediate. 7. Determine the active site residues essential to substrate binding and catalysis by site directed mutagenesis. Part III: Mechanism and structure of 4-chlorobenzoate:CoA ligase. 8. Crystallize and determine the x-ray structure of the ligase from Pseudomonas and/or Alcaligenes. 9. Locate the CoA binding site by site-directed mutagenesis of conserved residues. 10. Complete the determination of the kinetic mechanism of ligase catalysis.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM028688-20
Application #
6151017
Study Section
Biochemistry Study Section (BIO)
Program Officer
Ikeda, Richard A
Project Start
1981-02-01
Project End
2002-01-31
Budget Start
2000-02-01
Budget End
2001-01-31
Support Year
20
Fiscal Year
2000
Total Cost
$288,248
Indirect Cost
Name
University of New Mexico
Department
Chemistry
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
829868723
City
Albuquerque
State
NM
Country
United States
Zip Code
87131
Latham, John A; Ji, Tianyang; Matthews, Kaila et al. (2017) Catalytic Mechanism of the Hotdog-Fold Thioesterase PA1618 Revealed by X-ray Structure Determination of a Substrate-Bound Oxygen Ester Analogue Complex. Chembiochem 18:1935-1943
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Zhuang, Zhihao; Latham, John; Song, Feng et al. (2012) Investigation of the catalytic mechanism of the hotdog-fold enzyme superfamily Pseudomonas sp. strain CBS3 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA thioesterase. Biochemistry 51:786-94
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Zhao, Hong; Lim, Kap; Choudry, Anthony et al. (2012) Correlation of structure and function in the human hotdog-fold enzyme hTHEM4. Biochemistry 51:6490-2
Kim, Alexander; Benning, Matthew M; OkLee, Sang et al. (2011) Divergence of chemical function in the alkaline phosphatase superfamily: structure and mechanism of the P-C bond cleaving enzyme phosphonoacetate hydrolase. Biochemistry 50:3481-94
Chen, Danqi; Wu, Rui; Bryan, Tyrel L et al. (2009) In vitro kinetic analysis of substrate specificity in enterobactin biosynthetic lower pathway enzymes provides insight into the biochemical function of the hot dog-fold thioesterase EntH. Biochemistry 48:511-3

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